Imágenes de página
PDF
ePub

Ye travell'd tribe, ye macaroni train,

Of French friseurs and nosegays justly vain,
Who take a trip to Paris once a-year

To dress, and look like awkward Frenchmen here;
Lend me your hands. O fatal news to tell,

Their hands are only lent to the Heinelle.

Ay, take

MISS CATLEY.

take your travellers-travellers indeed!

Give me my bonny Scot, that travels from the Tweed. Where are the chiels? Ah! Ah, I well discern

The smiling looks of each bewitching bairn.

AIR-A bonny young lad is my Jockey.

gay;

I'll sing to amuse you by night and by day,
And be
unco merry when you are but
When you with your bagpipes are ready to play,
My voice shall be ready to carol away

With Sandy, and Sawney, and Jockey,
With Sawney, and Jarvie, and Jockey.

MRS BULKLEY,

you."

Ye gamesters, who, so eager in pursuit,
Make but of all your fortune one va toute:
Ye jockey tribe, whose stock of words are few,
<< I hold the odds.-Done, done, with you, with
Ye barristers, so fluent with grimace,
« My lord,―Your lordship misconceives the case.»
Doctors, who cough and answer every misfortuner,
<< I wish I'd been call'd in a little sooner :>>

Assist my cause with hands and voices hearty,
Come end the contest here, and aid my party.

MISS CATLEY.

AIR-Ballinamony.

Ye brave Irish lads, hark away to the crack,
Assist me, I pray, in this woful attack;

For sure I don't wrong you, you seldom are slack,
When the ladies are calling, to blush and hang back.
For you're always polite and attentive,

Still to amuse us inventive,

And death is your only preventive:

Your hands and your

voices for me.

MRS BULKLEY.

Well, madam, what if, after all this sparring,
We both agree, like friends, to end our jarring?

MISS CATLEY.

And that our friendship may remain unbroken,
What if we leave the Epilogue unspoken?

Agreed.

Agreed.

MRS BULKLEY.

MISS CATLEY.

MRS BULKLEY.

And now with late repentance,

Un-epilogued the poet waits his sentence.
Condemn the stubborn fool who can't submit
To thrive by flattery, though he starves by wit.

[Exeunt.

AN

EPILOGUE,

INTENDED FOR

MRS BULKLEY.

THERE is a place, so Ariosto sings,

A treasury for lost and missing things:

Lost human wits have places there assign'd them,
And they who lose their senses, there may find them.
But where's this place, this storehouse of the age?
The Moon, says he ;—but I affirm, the Stage:
At least in many things, I think, I see
His lunar, and our mimic world agree.
Both shine at night, for, but at Foote's alone,
We scarce exhibit till the sun goes down.
Both prone to change, no settled limits fix,
And sure the folks of both are lunatics.
But in this parallel my best pretence is,
That mortals visit both to find their senses;
To this strange spot, rakes, macaronies, cits,
Come thronging to collect their scatter'd wits.
The gay coquette, who ogles all the day,
Comes here at night, and goes a prude away.
Hither the affected city dame advancing,
Who sighs for operas, and doats on dancing,

"

Taught by our art her ridicule to pause on,
Quits the ballet, and calls for Nancy Dawson.
The gamester too, whose wit's all high or low,
Oft risks his fortune on one desperate throw,
Comes here to saunter, having made his bets,
Finds his lost senses out, and pays his debts.
The Mohawk too-with angry phrases stored,
As « Dam'me, sir,» and « Sir, I wear a sword;">
Here lesson'd for a while, and hence retreating,
Goes out, affronts his man, and takes a beating.
Here come the sons of scandal and of
But find no sense--for they had none to lose.
Of all the tribe here wanting an adviser,
Our author's the least likely to grow wiser;
Has he not seen how you your favour place
On sentimental queens and lords in lace?
Without a star, a coronet, or garter,

news,

How can the piece expect or hope for quarter?
No high-life scenes, no sentiment :-the creature
Still stoops among the low to copy nature.
Yes, he's far gone :-and yet some pity fix,
The English laws forbid to punish lunatics.1

This Epilogue was given in MS. by Dr Goldsmith to Dr Percy (late Bishop of Dromore); but for what comedy it was intended is not remembered.

THE

HAUNCH OF VENISON;

A

POETICAL EPISTLE

ΤΟ

LORD CLARE.

FIRST PRINTED IN MDCCLXV.

« AnteriorContinuar »